For the record, no, I still don't own Bioshock Infinite, even though it's only $29.99 at Amazon.com! |
I’ve mentioned before that I rarely have the luxury of playing
games anywhere near their release date. Given that the price drops from $60 to
$40 and eventually to $20 within months and years of the release, and given
that I really don’t have a budget for video games and thus get all of mine as
either 1) presents at birthday or Christmas or 2) rentals via the occasional
short burst of Gamefly membership, I tend to settle for “new-to-me” rather than
genuinely new. Which is fine, even though it puts me a bit behind the
conversation when it comes to the robust gaming community, which I really don’t
have a great deal of time to spend on anyway.
All of this is simply a prelude to explain why I’m currently
playing Dead Space 2, a gory,
survival horror game that came out back in 2011 and which has already spawned a
full sequel. That’s what I’m playing right now and that’s what I’m writing
about today.
Given the genre, it’s certainly no surprise that this game has
monsters, and they’re pretty scary monsters too: necromorphs, grotesquely
twisted corpses reanimated via some sort of alien infection, seem to exist
solely to terrorize engineer Isaac Clarke, leaving a very bloody path in their
wake.
Pictured: Isaac Clarke (left) and a necromorph (right). |
Of more interest than the monsters themselves, however, is the
fact that they are practically issued an open invitation to kill, maim and
disembowel by the powerful religious cult that worships the alien artifact
called the Marker that connects to the beasties. Of course, those that worship
the Marker do not see clearly the
horrific mayhem that their devotion will lead to, but they are persistently
pious in their belief nonetheless.
An early portion of the game sends Isaac through a Church of
Unification worship center, a religion that seems to be at least partially
inspired by Scientology. The devout here are clearly kooks—but are also
manipulative, greedy and oh-so-willing to deceive. And they actually come right
out and call conversion indoctrination.
So at least they’re honest on that front.
I have no idea why Mad Men's Betty Draper showed up when I did a Google image search for creepy preachers, but I decided to run with it anyway. |
Of course, using religious villains is nothing new. I feel, for
example, that Stephen King has overused the crazy Christian character to the
point where I sort of roll my eyes when we get another one like the Mom in Carrie or, more recently, Big Jim from Under the Dome. He’s far
from the only offender. Creepy fictional cultists may or may not be affiliated
with Christianity, but there’s something appealing to authors and screenwriters
(and video game writers, clearly) about religious devotion, especially if it’s
misguided, dangerous or downright evil.
You never see evil crazy cultists who are sort of nominal or
lukewarm in their faith, do you? Like, “Oh yeah I’ll go to the evil meeting and
do the evil chanting and all but I really don’t feel like sacrificing the
protagonist to my evil god and eating his liver because I’m really busy and I
don’t even care for liver.” I suppose that’s not as scary.
But at least these villains do tend to be kooky and misguided. The
Christian cultists are not generally presented as average, mainstream
believers. I don’t see the implication that these portrayals are really
intended to reflect poorly upon Christianity as a whole, because the villains
being portrayed have clearly not gotten it right. Their doctrine is twisted and
clearly contradictory to what Scripture accurately teaches (even if they can
pull a few verses out of context to defend their chanting and liver eating).
Where am I going with all this? We live in a world that is
increasingly hostile to all religion, but especially toward Christianity.
Slowly but surely, the attitude that Christians are stupid and maybe even
dangerous is permeating the perspectives of secular society.
If we really want intelligent discourse, of course, we need to look to t-shirts. |
The “stupid Christian” has been a character in poorly written
movies and TV shows for years, of course. But I’ve never seen the stereotype
really hit the mainstream until more recently. Part of it is symptomatic of an attack on religion wherein Christianity is the obvious leader and best
scapegoat. It’s too politically incorrect to attack Islam in the wake of the
response to 9/11 and other terrorist attacks; Jews have really had it pretty
rough through the years and now make up such a hefty percentage of entertainers
and performers that Hollywood wouldn’t know what to do without them;
Scientology is always an easy target, of course; many other religions aren’t
well enough represented in the United States to take the bulls eye so
naturally. If you’re going to attack religion, Christianity sort of makes sense
to go after, from a certain perspective.
And I have to say that a growing animosity toward religion kind of
makes sense. John Lennon’s idealistic dream world from Imagine, which lists religion as one of many
ills that divide humanity, is resonating with more and more people. What we’re
seeing are greater numbers that have been brought up being consistently fed
evolutionary theory as fact—and they’re cynical enough or detached enough or
simply calculating enough to follow that through to its natural conclusion. Whereas
many believe in Darwinistic evolution because they’ve been taught that science
has proven it conclusively, their lives don’t tend to match up with that head
knowledge. If mankind is a cosmic mistake, then the notion of any sort of
afterlife pretty much has to come off the table. You’re pretty lucky you
accidentally got this much, after all. But, in my opinion, most people don’t
tend to live like that.
It's a metaphor. But it seems about right. |
(And, yes, some try to squeeze and shove their faith into what
they’ve been taught about evolution, trying to reinterpret the words of God
Almighty through the lens of man’s opinion, but we’ve dealt with that in a prior
blog post. Anyway, if you’ve decided God can’t be trusted on the topic of
Creation, why are you so sure you can take His Word on heaven and hell?)
But more and more people, from my generation and younger
especially, are accepting the consequences of evolution, and a blowback against
religion is part of that. Think about it. If your worldview absolutely did not
allow for the existence of God, would you appreciate those who wanted modern
policy to be guided by an ancient book written by human charlatans feigning
divinity? So, yeah, you’d probably come to the conclusion that Christians are
stupid and that’s being generous. Factor in all the horrible things done in the
name of God throughout the years, as well as current crusades against
homosexuality and the like, and you might even conclude that Christians are
downright dangerous. There’s a consistency to the viewpoint—and it’s been
brewing for quite a while.
Of course, those who loudly decry the fact that Christians get the
same vote that the rest of us do seem to sort of forget the democracy and free
speech aspects of this nation of ours—but isn’t that the way it often is? We’re
all for equality and free speech so long as everyone else is saying what we
want to hear. I’m reminded of Jerry Falwell’s lawsuit against Larry Flynt
because of his filthy parodies in Hustler,
with Flynt attempting to explain that the same first amendment that permitted
his magazine to parodize public figures like Falwell allowed the preacher his
platform. But that’s really getting off topic.
A typical Westboro Baptist Bible study. |
My point is that the increasing vilification of Christianity has
been a long time coming and that it’s consistent with a secularist worldview. Much
good has been done in the name of Christ, but so has quite a bit of bad:
bloodshed, slavery, genocide, discrimination, and so much more. Of course, a
detestable, godless little hate group known as Westboro Baptist Church eagerly
follows the spotlight so they can attempt to be as
despicable as possible in
the name of Christ. We might rightly argue that most of these vile actions are
completely indefensible from a biblical point of view—especially taken as a
whole, since passages out of context can be twisted ad nauseam—but I fear that
means very little to those who see Christians as a hindrance to true progress
and enlightenment in our world.
In fact, if I’m being perfectly honest, there’s quite a bit that I
agree with some of those on that side of the aisle about. Fred Phelps and
company at Westboro make them sick? Great. They make me sick too. Even sicker
since they blaspheme my Savior and God in the process. They think it’s
ridiculous to try to restrict the rights of homosexuals because of the book of
Leviticus? So do I. This is really a longer conversation for another time—oh,
and probably a future book, although I’m not sure when—but we’re not under the
Law anymore (Rom. 10:4; Gal. 2:16, etc.) so I’ll point to Rom. 1 when talking
morality, but I think that all citizens of a nation should be extended the same
rights. They think we have a responsibility to be good stewards of this
environment and our world? I absolutely agree with that. They think that
religion leads to problems when people check their brains at the door and
blindly follow it? Yeah, I think that too. I also think the same thing about
political parties, for what it’s worth. But I agree that religion has led to
some horrible things. I don’t think that people should be forbidden from being
religious, of course—what sort of freedom is that?—but I think that following a
religion blindly is horrible.
His yoke is easy and His burden is light; religion sure as heck can't promise that! |
I recommend following Jesus Christ instead, personally.
So if the attacks on religion have a certain logical consistency
to them and all that, am I quite sure I’m standing on the side I ought to be
here, as a follower of Jesus Christ, a Christian author and speaker? Why, yes,
of course. And it all comes down to one word: truth.
My, that’s a powerful word. It’s a powerful concept, although I
fear it’s lost a lot of its bite in modern times. Well, that’s not quite right.
Truth is as powerful as ever, but people do not believe in it like they once
did.
Of course, one’s belief in something has very little impact
on...well...anything, does it? Whether
unicorns exist is not contingent on whether I believe in them or not. I can
choose to believe, as hard as I can, that
Just imagine if unicorns stopped existing just because some people say they're a myth! Preposterous! They frolic; therefore, they are. |
So the concept of genuine truth may be quite toothless in the view
of many today but that does nothing to make it, well, truthless. Sorry.
It may not make much sense to let a 2,000-year-old book shape
modern decisions. Unless that book
is Truth.
The horrible things done in the name of Christ over the years
build quite a damning case toward countless of His would-be followers. And yet,
if He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life, He remains so despite the
atrocities.
And the fact that He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life trumps
those atrocities. The fact that He is the Way, the Truth, and the Life trumps everything. Period.
Seriously. Right? |
I remember Francis Chan saying something along these lines in his
book Erasing
Hell. You’ve probably heard people say that they don’t believe in a
loving God that would send anyone to hell. Believe it or not, it’s the truth:
God is love (1 John 4:8), His love for us is so strong that He gave His Son to
die to save us from hell (John 3:16), but those who reject Him and His
sacrifice will spend an eternity in hell (John 12:48; Rev. 20:15).
It all comes down to truth. A world that rejects absolute truth
will naturally reject the Way, the Truth, and the Life. Because truth is more
powerful than feelings, more powerful than majority rules, more powerful than
belief.
And this, by the way, is why I disagree with those who preach that
the way to lead this country in a direction
toward God is through voting or
lobbying or debating or through politics at all. If you’re not happy with the
direction your world is heading, then spend your time doing something of
lasting value: introduce your world to the Truth. You want genuine change? That’s
how you do it. That’s the business the Holy Spirit is in. Washington? Not so
much.
Make disciples of all nations. That’s the way to open people’s
eyes. As Jesus said, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free”
(John 8:32).